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Thursday, October 31, 2019

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Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Assignment on "Teaching Skills And Competencies


Follow the link below to download the PDF file :


https://drive.google.com/file/d/1drv6wyszSPqdpxxmmCy_eUXDspAMaPJ6/view?usp=sharing



INTRODUCTION

Teaching is a process in which one individual teaches or instruct another individual. Teaching is a profession which provides opportunities to help others to achieve their goals. Teachers have the ability to change lives and develop well-educated and respectable students; they can help with not only knowledge growth but personal improvement, too. It’s an incredibly rewarding career path. Teacher learning is a continuous process that promote teachers’ teaching skills, master new knowledge, develop new proficiency, which in turn, help improve students’ learning. Being a teacher at any level requires a significant amount of knowledge and skill. Paying attention to the core competencies and skills for educators helps to ensure that all teachers and others who work in education are prepared to make school a positive experience for students and their families.

TEACHING COMPETENCIES

Competencies are defined as the set of knowledge, skills, and experience necessary for future, which manifests in activities. Competencies are knowledge, skills, attitudes, values, motivations and beliefs people need in order to be successful in a job. Teachers’ competencies can be classified under the following heads:

  1. Field Competencies
  2. Research Competencies
  3. Curriculum Competencies
  4. Lifelong Learning Competencies
  5. Social-Cultural Competencies
  6. Emotional Competencies
  7. Communication Competencies
  8. Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) Competencies
  9. Environmental Competencies

  1. FIELD COMPETENCIES
Field competencies are related to the question of “what should school teach?” They refer to the content that the teacher and students will study. Field competencies are the main areas of teacher competencies that include academic studies about content. Field competencies are the ones necessary for teachers to conduct their profession. They are the teacher competencies regarding the subjects that teachers will teach or students will learn.
  1. RESEARCH COMPETENCIES
Research Competencies include the competencies of research methods and techniques, designing and carrying out research in teachers’ fields. They support collaboration with colleagues and other specialists or people who are interested in curriculum studies and education. Research competencies are influential for teachers in following the developments in their fields and developing themselves based on these developments. Besides, the research competencies of teachers are of great importance for students in gaining the scientific thinking and scientific process skills. The research competencies help to improve all of the teachers’ competencies and also support research-based teacher education that is a new approach in teacher education.
  1. CURRICULUM COMPETENCIES
The curriculum competencies can be divided into two sub-competencies as curriculum development competencies and curriculum implementation competencies. Curriculum competencies contain the knowledge about curriculum philosophies and skills in curriculum development, curriculum design, elements of the curriculum development, models of curriculum development, approaches of designing curriculum development, curriculum development process, selecting and organizing the content, planning the teaching and testing conditions and preparing research for curriculum development. Curriculum competencies are related to the understanding of the curriculum plans for the teaching and learning. Curriculum competencies are the competencies of teachers oriented towards carrying out their teaching role more effectively. These competencies are related to both theoretical and practical competencies. These competencies defined as learning-teaching related competencies determine the framework of the knowledge and skills that teachers will gain. Without curriculum competencies, it is quiet difficult to produce an effective education service in schools.
  1. LIFELONG LEARNING COMPETENCIES
Lifelong learning process requires that learners take responsibility of
their learning. As individuals, teachers are acting for their own learning in the lifelong learning process. Lifelong learning activity goes through the whole life continuing between individual and the world. Lifelong learning competencies include the abilities of learning to learn, and teachers’ responsibilities of their own professional development. Lifelong learning competencies are related to the ability of learning and skills of using the means or tools of learning to improve the learning throughout the human life. Lifelong learning competencies refer to the teachers’ responsibilities for their own learning and development of lifelong learning skills for students. It means that lifelong learning includes two main abilities. The first one is related to teachers’ own lifelong learning ability and the second one is related to teachers’ responsibility to develop students’ lifelong abilities.
  1. EMOTIONAL COMPETENCIES
Emotional Competencies are composed of teachers’ and students’ values, morals, beliefs, attitudes, anxieties, motivation, empathy and so on. They are related to the implementation of psychological consultation and curriculum of guidance in school. Teachers’ emotional competencies can help students to learn and students’ willingness to learn can be increased if teachers know how to improve the emotional dimension of students’ learning. Emotional competencies also help teachers become effective teachers while monitoring the students’ learning. Learning requires emotional supports that create positive feeling for learning-teaching process. Teachers become a learning consultant and mentor about learning for their students.
  1. SOCIAL-CULTURAL COMPETENCIES
Social-cultural competencies include the knowledge about social-cultural background of students and teachers, local, national and international values, democracy and human rights issues, team and collaborative work with others, and social studies. All of them provide freedom to students and teachers in learning-teaching process and also promote the learning. The individuals become social and cultural being in social life. Thus, there is a strong relationship between learning and students’ social-cultural background. Some of the learning theories discussed learning as social-cultural context and teachers’ social-cultural competencies can promote students learning. Humanistic approach and social theories can be put into practice in the classroom by means of teachers’ social-cultural competencies.
  1. COMMUNICATION COMPETENCIES
Communication competencies include communication models, interaction among teachers, students, social environment and learning topics. Teachers also have competencies in using oral, body and professional language in their fields. Communication competencies include voice, body language and words such as speaking, singing and sometimes tone of voice, sign language, paralanguage, touch, eye contact, or the use of writing. They include communication skills in intrapersonal and interpersonal processing, listening, observing, speaking, questioning, analyzing, and evaluating.
  1. ICT COMPETENCIES
Information and Communication Technologies - ICT competencies are based on using tools and technical equipments for the reaching, disturbing and transferring the knowledge. They include any technology that helps to produce, manipulate, store, communicate, and/or disseminate information. ICT competencies are concerned with the use of technology in managing and processing the information include all technologies for the manipulation and communication of information. It means that the ICT competency is very important to improve the communication in the learning and teaching process.
  1. ENVIRONMENTAL COMPETENCIES
Environmental Competencies can be defined as competencies for
ecological and environmental safety. Ecological/environmental aspect is a dimension of the sustainable development of teachers. Knowledge, attitudes and skills about ecological system and environment such as keeping clean and available environment, management of ecological resources, being aware of ecosystem, feasible uses of natural resources, availability of natural resources can be defined as Environmental competencies.

TEACHING SKILLS
 
Teaching skills are a set of overt, verbal and non-verbal behaviour which are observable, measurable, and modifiable through practice. They are used in pre-instructional, instructional, and post-instructional stages for achieving predetermined specific objectives. Some of these skills are extensively used in routine teaching by all teachers and known as ‘core teaching skills’. Following are the major teaching skills:
  1. Skill of introducing a lesson
  2. Skill of stimulus variation
  3. Skill of explaining
  4. Skill of illustrating with examples
  5. Skill of using black board
  6. Skill of posing probing questions
  7. Skill of fluency in questioning
  8. Skill of reinforcement
  1. SKILL OF INTRODUCING A LESSON
When a teacher introduces a lesson, he gives a brief introduction about the lesson in order to pre-dispose the pupil’s mind to it. This has to serve two main functions, namely refreshing and ensuring the pre-requisites and motivating the pupils to learn the new lesson. Components of the skills include use of previous knowledge / pre-requisites, use of appropriate devices, motivation and continuity.
  1. SKILL OF STIMULUS VARIATION
It involves deliberate change in the stimuli presented by the teacher for the purpose of drawing, stimulating, and maintaining the attention pf the learners throughout the class. Components of the skill include teacher movements and gestures, change in speech pattern and interaction style, focussing, pausing, and oral-visual switching. The variation in the stimuli helps in avoiding monotony and generating interest among students which in turn makes learning effective.
  1. SKILL OF EXPLAINING
Explaining is bringing out the exact meaning of a concept or idea. It describes ‘how’, ‘why’, and ‘what’ of a concept, phenomenon or event. Components include use of beginning statements for drawing attention, use of explaining links to bring continuity, use of mediators in the form of examples, anecdotes, etc., and questions to test pupil’s understanding. Explanation is a set of interrelated statements elaborating a learning material being taught.
  1. SKILL OF ILLUSTRATING WITH EXAMPLES
It is the skill for timely use of examples for making an idea or concept lucid. Components of the skill include formulating simple, interesting, and relevant examples, use of appropriate verbal and non verbal media for examples, and use of inductive-deductive approach for examples. A good illustrative example will also engage the pupil’s attention.
  1. SKILL OF USING BLACK BOARD
Black board is the most widely used of all visual aids. It is one of the quickest and easiest means of illustrating an important point. Matter once written in the black board can be erased easily and new materials added as the lesson progresses. Components of the skill include legibility of hand writing, neatness, organization, and appropriateness of black board work.
  1. SKILL OF POSING PROBING QUESTIONS
This is the skill required in applying the technique of effectively dealing with student responses for going deep into their knowledge. Questions calling for such original and deep level responses are qualified as probing. Components include prompting, seeking further information, refocussing, increasing critical awareness and redirection.
  1. SKILL OF FLUENCY IN QUESTIONING
Successful teaching is highly de[ended on questioning. Questioning promotes involvement, initiates thinking, creates motivation and enhances learning. Fluency in questioning is the rate of meaningful questions put per unit time by the teacher. Components include simplicity, conciseness, relevancy, specificity, grammatical correctness, and clarity and audibility.
  1. SKILL OF REINFORCEMENT
It is a major condition for effective learning. It provides immediate rewarding feedbacks for correct responses. The encouraging reactions of teacher would strengthen and discouraging reactions would weaken pupil responses. Components include positive verbal and non verbal reinforcers and negative verbal and non verbal reinforcers.

CONCLUSION
A teacher competency is defined in terms of what the teacher knows, believes, or can do, in the capacity of a teacher. Teaching skills are the reflections of the competency of the teacher with respect to the task of teaching. A competent teacher can perform the skills systematically and effectively. Teachers who are skilled create a positive learning environment. Although being well versed in your subject area is important, being able to communicate necessary skills and concepts in a way students can understand is crucial. Teachers develop skills over time through best practices shared by other teachers, continuing education and classroom experience.

REFERENCES